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Show zBB 1l11-olng 1lcaUt~ ®lb llose anb $i111er and a wrinkled hand closely clasping the other, as though holding fast to the message meant the keeping of the hope it brought. Utterly exhausted, he slept until noon. When he woke, it was with the feeling that something vitally important had happened. He could not remember what it was until he heard the rustling of paper and saw the two telegrams. He read them once more, in the clear light of day, fearing to find the message but a fantasy of the night. To his unbounded relief, it was still there-no dream of water to the man dying of thirst, but a living reality that sunlight did not change. "Thank God," he cried aloud, sobbing for very joy, "Thank God!" Meanwhile, the Resourceful One had shown the nurse how to cut a sleeve out of one of Allison's old coats, and open the under-arm seam. Having done this, she was requested to treat a negligee shirt in the same way. Then the village barber was sent for, and instructed to do his utmost. "Funny," remarked Doctor Jack, pensively, "that nobody has thought of doing that before. If I hadn't come just as I did, you'd soon have looked like a chimpanzee, and, eventually, you'd have been beyond the reach of anything but a lawn-mower. They did n't even think to braid your hair and tie it with a blue ribbon." lltsen from tbe l!leab 289 The nurse laughed; so did Allison but the 'Import. pensive expression of the young man'~ face did ancc: of a not change. 1lat ·~I've had occasion lately," he continued "to observe the powerful tonic effect of clothes. A woman patient told me once that the moral _support afforded by a well-fitting corset was mconceJvable to the mind of a mere man. She said that a corset is to a woman what a hat is to a man-it prepares for any emergency, enables one to meet life on equal terms, and even to face a rebellious cook or janitor with' that repose which marks the caste of Vere de Vere.'" '' I 've often wondered," returned Allison "why I felt so much-well, so much mar~ adequate with my hat on.'' "Clear case of inherited instincts. The wild dog used to make himself a smooth bed in the r~shes of long grass by turning around several times upon the se lected spot. Consequently, the modern dog has to do the same stunt before he can go to sleep. The hat is a modification of the helmet, which always had to be worn outside the house, in the days when hold-ups and murders were even more frequent than now, and the desire for a walking-stick comes from the old fashion of carrying a spear or a sword. If a man took off his helmet, it was e~Ui valen t to saying: ' In the presence of my fnend, I am safe.' When he takes off his hat |